Citizens for Appropriate Transportation (CAT)
Eisenhower
Transportation Corridor
NOISE
– Unwanted Sound
Noise is unwanted
sound.
Noise is measured in decibels (dB), but the human ear filters out
both low and high frequencies, so the A-weighted decibel scale (dBA) is used because it measures noise the way the human
ear perceives it. Loud noise affects our
ability to talk to another person, hold a telephone conversation, sleep, or
concentrate. Traffic noise has more impact on our
lives from Spring to Fall when windows are open.
The level of traffic
noise from the Eisenhower is always changing based on:
Traffic noise comes
from three sources: engines, exhausts, and tires. Traffic noise generally affects people who
live within 500 feet (about 1.5 blocks) from an expressway. The Illinois Department of Transportation
(IDOT) should measure existing noise from a variety of locations to determine
the actual noise impact area. The CTA
Blue Line and the railroad create more noise.
Noise experts use two
numbers to summarize traffic noise.
Leq is about 3 dBA less than L10 for the same traffic
conditions. The U.S. Federal Highway
Administration noise criteria for residential areas are 70 dBA
(L10) and 67 dBA (Leq) and 75 dBA (L10)
and 72 dBA (Leq)
for business districts. A quiet urban
night is about 40 dBA, a vacuum cleaner at 3 feet is
about 70 dBA, and a garbage disposal at 3 feet is
about 80 dBA.
The methodology for
doing a noise analysis has two steps: (1) measure existing noise levels and (2)
predict future noise levels based on the transportation proposal being
considered..
If future noise
levels will increase by 10 decibels or more, or if noise criteria are exceeded, then the noise impact should be abated. There are three general ways to abate road
noise – (1) at the source (quieter vehicles), (2) along the sound path, or (3)
at the receiver. Quieter vehicles are
not within the control of IDOT. Common
ways to abate noise along the sound path are changing the horizontal or vertical
alignment of the Ike, noise barriers, and creating buffer zones.
Noise barriers cannot
completely block all noise. Effective
noise barriers can reduce noise levels by 10 to 15 decibels, which cuts traffic
noise in half. To be effective, the
barrier must be high enough and long enough to block the view of the road. The maximum height for noise barriers is
usually 25 feet for structural and aesthetic reasons.
Openings for
intersecting streets destroy some of the effectiveness of noise barriers. We have seven openings in
Noise barriers reduce
noise in four ways: (1) absorb sound, (2) transmit it, (3) reflect it, and (4)
force it to take a longer path around or over the barrier. Positive reactions to noise barriers are
better sleeping, easier conversations, windows open
more, privacy, and more yard use.
Negative reactions include restricted views, feeling of confinement,
lack of air circulation, and increased shadows.
Noise barriers should be far enough away from residences to avoid visual
dominance.
Noise barriers have a
roadway side and a residential side. The
design should be different for each.
From the roadway side where motorists travel at high speed, drivers tend
to notice overall form, color, and surface texture. A design that avoids tunnel effect by varying
form, materials, and surface treatments is desirable. The residential side has pedestrians that
walk at 2 to 4 MPH and motorists driving at 25 MPH. Shrubs, vines, and other plantings will
soften the visual form. The wall texture
and rhythm on the residential side should account for what people see at slower
travel speeds and what they see from their homes.
Transportation
corridors like the Ike are a major part of the urban landscape. They don't have to
be ugly. IDOT has an opportunity to develop
a good visual design for the Eisenhower.
Rick Kuner – revised
August 2011